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Aug 23, 2013
08/13
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if we did not adopt new techniques we would be quality of educational malpractice. we don't bring the new techniques in because they cut our cost. we bring them in to keep our education current. >> so does any of this make you feel any better? >> i don't think that we really are addressing the individual challenges that people have. and, i mean, for example, i know someone who just finished her master's degree and her student loan was sold from one company to another and the price is going from $400 to $900. and the other thing we're really not addressing is the student loans that people take out is also subsidizing their basic living expenses and the textbooks. it's not just going to the university. but there's a certain degree of time that you're taking away from being employed in order to be successful in college. and we're really not addressing that, like myself, the student loans i took out help me eat and pay the rent. so it's not just paying for the school, it's paying for those things as well. >> you do get into trouble when you take out the private loans be
if we did not adopt new techniques we would be quality of educational malpractice. we don't bring the new techniques in because they cut our cost. we bring them in to keep our education current. >> so does any of this make you feel any better? >> i don't think that we really are addressing the individual challenges that people have. and, i mean, for example, i know someone who just finished her master's degree and her student loan was sold from one company to another and the price...
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Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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stop and educate. stop and house. stop and choose schools over jails. keep dreaming. >> as we gather today, 50 years later, their march is now our march, and it must go on. and our focus has broadened to include the cause of women, of latinos, of asian-americans, of lesbians, of gays, of people with disabilities, and of countless others across this great country who still yearn for equality, opportunity, and fair treatment. >> when the leading cause of death for black men my age and younger is gun violence, we still have work to do. when we still have a justice system that treats the economically disadvantaged and minorities different than others, we still have work to do. >> i gave a little blood on that bridge in selma, alabama, for the right to vote. i am not going to stand by and let the supreme court take the right to vote away from us. you cannot stand by. you cannot sit down. you got to stand up, speak up, speak out, and get in the way. make some noise! >> the vision preached by my father half century ago was that his four little children would o
stop and educate. stop and house. stop and choose schools over jails. keep dreaming. >> as we gather today, 50 years later, their march is now our march, and it must go on. and our focus has broadened to include the cause of women, of latinos, of asian-americans, of lesbians, of gays, of people with disabilities, and of countless others across this great country who still yearn for equality, opportunity, and fair treatment. >> when the leading cause of death for black men my age and...
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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i think the problem is we're not really investing in education and not investing in the next generation. we're having students graduate from school with dozens of thousands of dollars in debt. not getting jobs that are essentially paying enough to get that money on the table immediately. and it's affecting what we can do after college. people are getting married later and it's not good for anyone. and it places a burden on students, as well as their families. nate tisa and sky, thank you so much for joining us. as i said, the president is going to speak in the next couple of hours about the student debt kriss and we'll see what he has to say. we'll hear what his plan is. also tomorrow an exclusive interview with president obama. chris cuomo meets up with the president today as he hits the road on that bus tour for education reform. chris' exclusive interview with the president tomorrow morning that will air on cnn's "new day." we're back in a minute. of my grandkids. wish i saw mine more often, but they live so far away. i've been thinking about moving in with my daughter and her family
i think the problem is we're not really investing in education and not investing in the next generation. we're having students graduate from school with dozens of thousands of dollars in debt. not getting jobs that are essentially paying enough to get that money on the table immediately. and it's affecting what we can do after college. people are getting married later and it's not good for anyone. and it places a burden on students, as well as their families. nate tisa and sky, thank you so...
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Aug 28, 2013
08/13
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or to rebuilding our education system. to give all our children a common core of knowledge necessary to ensure success. or to give americans of all ages access to affordable college and training programs. and we thank the president for his efforts in those regards. we cannot relax in our efforts to implement health care reform in a way that ends discrimination against those with pre-existing conditions. one of which is inadequate income to pay for rising health care. a health care reform that will lower costs and lengthen lives. nor can we stop investing in science and technology to train our young people of all races for the jobs of tomorrow. and to act on what we learned about our bodies, our businesses, and our climate. we must push open those stubborn gates. we cannot be discouraged by a supreme court decision that said we don't need this critical provision in the voting rights act because, look at the states. it made it harder for african-americans and hispanics and students and the elderly and the infirmed and poor w
or to rebuilding our education system. to give all our children a common core of knowledge necessary to ensure success. or to give americans of all ages access to affordable college and training programs. and we thank the president for his efforts in those regards. we cannot relax in our efforts to implement health care reform in a way that ends discrimination against those with pre-existing conditions. one of which is inadequate income to pay for rising health care. a health care reform that...
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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chris cuomo met up with the president today as he hit the road on a bus tour for education reform. his exclusive interview, tomorrow morning, cnn's "new day," 6:00 a.m. starting. >>> up next, bradley manning wants to be a woman. call him chelsea. the army says it won't pay for his hormone therapy, but does he have a case? >>> plus, one school in arkansas arming teachers and they've got a warning to prove it. this as we hear the chilling conversation between a school worker and a gunman in georgia. >> i thought the same thing. you know, i tried to commit suicide last year after my husband left me, but look at me now. i'm still working and everything is okay. you said michael hill, right? okay. ♪ [ male announcer ] a man. a man and his truck... and a broken fence... and a lost calf. ♪ and the heart to search for as long as it takes. and the truck that lets him search for as long as it takes. ♪ the all-new chevy silverado. the most fuel-efficient v8 in a pickup. strong for all the roads ahead. the most fuel-efficient v8 in a pickup. this man is about to be the millionth customer
chris cuomo met up with the president today as he hit the road on a bus tour for education reform. his exclusive interview, tomorrow morning, cnn's "new day," 6:00 a.m. starting. >>> up next, bradley manning wants to be a woman. call him chelsea. the army says it won't pay for his hormone therapy, but does he have a case? >>> plus, one school in arkansas arming teachers and they've got a warning to prove it. this as we hear the chilling conversation between a school...
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Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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now, president obama has a plan to help lower the cost of higher education. for a strong bag that grips the can... ♪ get glad forceflex. small change, big difference. >>> new york is a college town and hosts a number of elite universities like columbia and nyu. along with those elite degrees comes a pretty hefty price tag. the average graduate is graduating with $26,000 worth of debt and that number doesn't appear to be shrinking. president obama isn't happy about how much college is costing, neither are students and parent, but how does the president pran to change things? >> well, what president obama's looking to do is create a new rating system for universities. basically, giving more information to people looking to go to college. more than just the curriculum or sports program is like. like what kind of debt loads students are carrying when they graduate or what kind of salaries are students making after their first year of school. what the idea is to have this rating system and then tie the school's financial aid to that rating, so it's based on perf
now, president obama has a plan to help lower the cost of higher education. for a strong bag that grips the can... ♪ get glad forceflex. small change, big difference. >>> new york is a college town and hosts a number of elite universities like columbia and nyu. along with those elite degrees comes a pretty hefty price tag. the average graduate is graduating with $26,000 worth of debt and that number doesn't appear to be shrinking. president obama isn't happy about how much college is...
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Aug 26, 2013
08/13
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education is a great equalizer. education is the passport out of poverty and into the middle class. what we need to see that those of us in the congress and those of us in the private sector need to come together and work with president barack obama to put all of our citizens back to work. >> congressman, you mention that president barack obama, african-american president, that there's a lot of progress. some believe there's so much progress we don't need to deal with issues of race. this is an op-ed from bobby jindal just yesterday. he said we place far too much emphasis on our separateness, our heritage, ethnic background, skin color, we live in the age of mexican americans, cuban americans. he said we need to get over that. do you think he has a point here? do you think our separateness is essential to move forward? >> i think it's important to understand we're not there yet. we'd like to get there. we have not yet laid down the burden of race. race is very much involved in every segment of the american society. the scars and stains of racism are very deep embedded in our society
education is a great equalizer. education is the passport out of poverty and into the middle class. what we need to see that those of us in the congress and those of us in the private sector need to come together and work with president barack obama to put all of our citizens back to work. >> congressman, you mention that president barack obama, african-american president, that there's a lot of progress. some believe there's so much progress we don't need to deal with issues of race. this...
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Aug 23, 2013
08/13
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our kristi moments has some advice on how to save for your child's education and how to speak money. >> reporter: the best way to pay for college? start saving early, very early. a small number of companies offer their employees a 529 college plan in their benefits package. with the 529 it's pre-tax money that comes out of every paycheck into a fund that will grow tax-free and can be taken out tax-free if used to pay for college tuition or other higher education expenses. some companies even do a match. until it becomes more popular to offer an open enrollment time you're going to have to it to do it on your own. begin with your state-sponsored 529. >> one of the best things about 529 plans is that they're very flexible. so you can transfer these funds among individual users if your son opts not to go to college, for example, your daughter can use the money. you can also use them in different states and in different schools. >> you can't save too much too soon, because college costs are rising fast. according to the college board, the average 2012-2013 tuition increase was 4.2% at pr
our kristi moments has some advice on how to save for your child's education and how to speak money. >> reporter: the best way to pay for college? start saving early, very early. a small number of companies offer their employees a 529 college plan in their benefits package. with the 529 it's pre-tax money that comes out of every paycheck into a fund that will grow tax-free and can be taken out tax-free if used to pay for college tuition or other higher education expenses. some companies...
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Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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we'll outline the president's plan to help students find the best value for their education dollar. >>> also, who is watching what you click on and when you're on line? how your privacy is being compromised for profit, and worst perhaps, the reverend joseph lowery. he helped organize the original march. i talked with him about his thoughts for today and the future. that's when i talked with my doctor. he gave me some blood tests... showed it was low t. that's it. it was a number. [ male announcer ] today, men with low t have androgel 1.62% testosterone gel. the #1 prescribed topical testosterone replacement therapy increases testosterone when used daily. women and children should avoid contact with application sites. discontinue androgel and call your doctor if you see unexpected signs of early puberty in a child, or signs in a woman, which may include changes in body hair or a large increase in acne, possibly due to accidental exposure. men with breast cancer or who have or might have prostate cancer, and women who are or may become pregnant or are breast-feeding, should not use andr
we'll outline the president's plan to help students find the best value for their education dollar. >>> also, who is watching what you click on and when you're on line? how your privacy is being compromised for profit, and worst perhaps, the reverend joseph lowery. he helped organize the original march. i talked with him about his thoughts for today and the future. that's when i talked with my doctor. he gave me some blood tests... showed it was low t. that's it. it was a number. [...
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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we're going to keep on educating. we're going to keep on mentoring. we're going to keep on community building. we're going to keep on ending violence. we're going to keep on creating peace. we ain't going to let nobody turn us around. >> it's all about keeping on. originally, that march was the march on washington for jobs and freedom. at the time black unemployment was twice that of white citizens. that figure still remains true. >> it's greater. 50 years later, we're greater but less equal. 31 cities where black joblessness above 50%. stop and create job training skills. we must not confuse president obama's role with that of dr. king. dr. king is in the frederick douglass line. president obama is in the abraham lincoln,roosevelt, kennedy line. he will do quite well. we need a response to the dream. we need a speech focused on legislation and appropriation. >> how does the president do that? how does he create the kind of environment where you have jobs for african-americans so you don't still see the same despairty. >> we need a commitment of the c
we're going to keep on educating. we're going to keep on mentoring. we're going to keep on community building. we're going to keep on ending violence. we're going to keep on creating peace. we ain't going to let nobody turn us around. >> it's all about keeping on. originally, that march was the march on washington for jobs and freedom. at the time black unemployment was twice that of white citizens. that figure still remains true. >> it's greater. 50 years later, we're greater but...
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Aug 23, 2013
08/13
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this is something the department of education is planning to roll out on its own. it doesn't require any change in the law. and the education department is already collecting a lot of the information that will enable it to do these ratings. so that is actually going to be a new source of information for consumers which can only help people who are trying to figure out where they should go to college and where they will get the best return on what is really a humongous investment of money. >> let's talk about the money. there are some critics, obviously, of the government subsidizing loans. and the federal government actually profits from lending college students money. so feds have some skin in the game here. can the federal government really be a fair arbiter do you think of a college's value? >> well, that's a fair question. and this gets to the second part of this idea, which will require new legislation, congressional approval. and that's to tie federal aid to these metrics about schools. so if one of your metrics is affordability or graduation rates, people go
this is something the department of education is planning to roll out on its own. it doesn't require any change in the law. and the education department is already collecting a lot of the information that will enable it to do these ratings. so that is actually going to be a new source of information for consumers which can only help people who are trying to figure out where they should go to college and where they will get the best return on what is really a humongous investment of money....
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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the president wants to see 100,000 new stem teachers trained over the next decade. >> a higher education is the single bets investment you can make in your future, and i'm proud of all the students who are making that investment. >> reporter: and all of this is not just about making the country more competitive. researchers have found students in stem fields generally enjoy better returns on their education investment with more job options and higher salaries. an average engineering graduate, for example, can easily start at 65,000 a year, and with one out of five american jobs now stem related, that's enough to make students and parents at many strong stem schools very excited, indeed. >> i am doing that! >> reporter: tom foreman, cnn, >> reporter: tom foreman, cnn, washington. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com >>> hi, there. i'm brianna keilar sitting in for brooke baldwin. first up, we know that the u.s. will punish syria. after two years and five months of attacks on its own people, president bashar al assad crossed what the u.s. called the red line. one step too far in this civi
the president wants to see 100,000 new stem teachers trained over the next decade. >> a higher education is the single bets investment you can make in your future, and i'm proud of all the students who are making that investment. >> reporter: and all of this is not just about making the country more competitive. researchers have found students in stem fields generally enjoy better returns on their education investment with more job options and higher salaries. an average engineering...
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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. >> i would rather educate those that don't have fathers. >> reporter: it is 2:00 in the morning and englewood is wide awake. the cops call this trouble time. a time when the calls come in, shots fired once again. when we arrive, a group of young men are being questioned in a stance we saw here all night. hands placed on the car hood. friends and relatives watch and wait. down the road, we see it again. this one, the end of a police chase. guess who we see again supervising? sergeant sebastian. we've got a peek. only a glimpse of life in englewood. we met good people, good police officers and, yet, we have seen the sadness where there are no easy solutions. we heard the word respect a lot. respect each other. respect life. >> hmm. my former chicago colleague joins me now live from chicago. mark, good to see you. great report, by the way. thank you for coming on cnn. >> thank you, don. thank you for having me. >> listen. watching this, it is like you can see the battle lines drawn here. the good people and of course the bad people. which side do you think is winning after doing this?
. >> i would rather educate those that don't have fathers. >> reporter: it is 2:00 in the morning and englewood is wide awake. the cops call this trouble time. a time when the calls come in, shots fired once again. when we arrive, a group of young men are being questioned in a stance we saw here all night. hands placed on the car hood. friends and relatives watch and wait. down the road, we see it again. this one, the end of a police chase. guess who we see again supervising?...
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Aug 26, 2013
08/13
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the board of education closed nearly 50 schools to help pay down a $1 billion deficit. the district says it plans to invest more money in its teach-for-america program and charter schools. >>> scientists are designing a bigger, better version of the hubble space telescope. according to space.com, the new giant magellan telescope will be ten times sharper than the hubble. it won't come cheap. the new telescope is expected to cost a staggering $700 million and be up and running in northern chile by 2022. >>> and you hear that charity nourishes the soul. in raleigh, north carolina, it may drain the collection plate. the city says if you want to feed the homeless, you'd better cough up big bucks for a permit. cnn's ashley banfield with the legal view this morning. good morning. >>> hi, happy monday to you. this is a bit of a weird one, right? i mean, feeding the homeless, but you have to pay to get a permit? this is exactly the problem. this group has been doing it for six years. they showed up on saturday with, i don't know, 100 sausage biscuits and gallons of coffee. gues
the board of education closed nearly 50 schools to help pay down a $1 billion deficit. the district says it plans to invest more money in its teach-for-america program and charter schools. >>> scientists are designing a bigger, better version of the hubble space telescope. according to space.com, the new giant magellan telescope will be ten times sharper than the hubble. it won't come cheap. the new telescope is expected to cost a staggering $700 million and be up and running in...
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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we're going to keep on educating. we're going to keep on mentoring. we're going to keep on community building. we're going to keep on ending violence. we're going to keep on creating peace. we ain't going to let nobody turn us around. >> and bernice king is dr. king's youngest child. she just turned 5 years old when her father was killed. bernice sat down for a cnn.com red chair interview. >> hey, fred. we recently sat down with bernice king at ebeneezer baptist church here in atlanta and she told us about learning of her father's death when she was only 5 years old, what it was like growing up as martin luther king jr.'s daughter. >> when the assassination occurred i was asleep. and the next day or -- my mother had to find a way to to explain to me that your father -- when you see him, he's going to be in a cassette and he won't be able to talk with you. wow. i mean, for a 5-year-old. wow. ♪ literally seven days before his assassination was my 5th birthday. we couldn't celebrate it that day because my father was leading the march in memphis, tennes
we're going to keep on educating. we're going to keep on mentoring. we're going to keep on community building. we're going to keep on ending violence. we're going to keep on creating peace. we ain't going to let nobody turn us around. >> and bernice king is dr. king's youngest child. she just turned 5 years old when her father was killed. bernice sat down for a cnn.com red chair interview. >> hey, fred. we recently sat down with bernice king at ebeneezer baptist church here in...
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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. >>> but first, this week cnn heroes saw refugee girls in urban chicago struggling to get an education and to fit in to their new communities and took it upon herself to reach out to those who desperately need a place to call home. >> my family come to america because we want a better life. we are 12 people in the family. i got to chicago, i migrate. they put me in ninth grade. it's really hard. it i'm totally lost. >> it's even harder to be a refugee teenage girl. >> my name is blair and i help refugee girls find their place in america. in my free time after work i was tutoring different kids one girl is really struggling. >> hello. >> hi. how's it going? >> good. nice to see you. >> i had more because i'm a girl. cook food for my family. >> we started going on field trips. we started talking about college. things started to change. >> are you excited for classes? >> yeah. >> one of our biggest goals together is to graduate high school and be on a path to college. i'm sure there's other girls. >> girls! we are saw many. >> there are about 50 girls in our different programs. >> well, y
. >>> but first, this week cnn heroes saw refugee girls in urban chicago struggling to get an education and to fit in to their new communities and took it upon herself to reach out to those who desperately need a place to call home. >> my family come to america because we want a better life. we are 12 people in the family. i got to chicago, i migrate. they put me in ninth grade. it's really hard. it i'm totally lost. >> it's even harder to be a refugee teenage girl....
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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he says it will help students make smarter choices about higher education. >> the fact is that we have been spending more money on prisons, less money on college. and meanwhile, not enough colleges have been working to figure out how do we control costs? how do we cut back on costs? so all of this sticks it to students, sticks it to families and also taxpayers end up paying a bigger price. the average student that borrows for college now graduates owing more than $26,000. some owe a lot more than that. i have heard from a lot of these young people who are frustrated that they have done everything they're supposed to do, good grades in high school, applied to college, did well in school, but now they come out and they have this crushing debt that is crippling their sense of self reliance and their dreams and it becomes harder to start a family and buy a home if you are servicing $1,000 worth of debt every month. >>> so under the president's plan colleges would receive federal financial aid based on the new college ratings. the colleges may be rated on measures like tuition and graduatio
he says it will help students make smarter choices about higher education. >> the fact is that we have been spending more money on prisons, less money on college. and meanwhile, not enough colleges have been working to figure out how do we control costs? how do we cut back on costs? so all of this sticks it to students, sticks it to families and also taxpayers end up paying a bigger price. the average student that borrows for college now graduates owing more than $26,000. some owe a lot...
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Aug 28, 2013
08/13
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you know, my own family, my grandparents didn't finish an elementary school education. my parents grew up in the south in new orleans, segregation, drank at colored fountains. can you imagine a day, can you imagine what your life would have been like if this hadn't taken place? >> no, i really can't. i think sometimes people don't understand how emotional this is for many americans. i mean, the cab driver that was driving me over here broke down crying talking about his family and the struggle he's gone through. i tried to pay him, he wouldn't even take money from me. he said just go and tell the truth about what this means for us. such an emotional day to imagine the same spot that dr. king was standing there, he couldn't drink from a water fountain in parts of this country. and then 50 years later to, have a black president to stand on that same spot, it's so emotional. my mother grew up under segregation. my mother was mistreated. my father. my mother is not even 70 years old. she's still in her 06 -- 60s. people are crying, people are hugging each other. it's just a
you know, my own family, my grandparents didn't finish an elementary school education. my parents grew up in the south in new orleans, segregation, drank at colored fountains. can you imagine a day, can you imagine what your life would have been like if this hadn't taken place? >> no, i really can't. i think sometimes people don't understand how emotional this is for many americans. i mean, the cab driver that was driving me over here broke down crying talking about his family and the...
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Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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. >>> but first, this week's cnn hero saw refugee girls in urban chicago struggling to get an education and fit into their new community. so she took it upon herself to reach out to those who desperately need a place to call home. >> my family came to america because we want a better life. we are 12 people in the family. my dad took us to chicago to migrate. it was really hard the first day. i'm totally lost. it's hard enough to be a teenage girl in the united states, so it's even harder to be a refugee teenage girl. >> my name is blair brett schneider and i help teen girls find their place. one teen girl was really struggling. >> i had to do more because i'm a girl. >> we started going on field trips. we talked about college. then things started changing. >> are you getting registered for classes? >> one of our goals was for her to finish high school and get on a path to college. this was really important to me. i thought, there's got to be other girls. there are about 50 girls in our different programs. >> you're making real progress. i'm so proud of you, you know? >> our mentorship p
. >>> but first, this week's cnn hero saw refugee girls in urban chicago struggling to get an education and fit into their new community. so she took it upon herself to reach out to those who desperately need a place to call home. >> my family came to america because we want a better life. we are 12 people in the family. my dad took us to chicago to migrate. it was really hard the first day. i'm totally lost. it's hard enough to be a teenage girl in the united states, so it's...
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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we have more on an education about it. he, independence ra. >> i'm it's like mud coming in your mouth. let's talk about what causes so much dust out there. that's yuma, arizona. what you actually deal with monsoonal thunderstorms, all you need is one of those stronger downdraft and that leading edge will kind of take all that dust and carry it right there, right along with the cloud. that's pretty much it. typical this dime of year. they're still seeing the moisture. in fact the tropical moisture is still in place. they continue to see some of these into the forecast. one of the things were watching, though, is all that moisture making its way toward yosemite. potential there as you see those thunderstorms right over the burn area. you could actually have flooding. once again you want the rain, but never too much in the wrong place. the complete opposite, we're talking about heat in the midwest. we're talking about temperatures that feel like 100, even 110 degrees out there. that's a good 20 degrees above normal. that heat
we have more on an education about it. he, independence ra. >> i'm it's like mud coming in your mouth. let's talk about what causes so much dust out there. that's yuma, arizona. what you actually deal with monsoonal thunderstorms, all you need is one of those stronger downdraft and that leading edge will kind of take all that dust and carry it right there, right along with the cloud. that's pretty much it. typical this dime of year. they're still seeing the moisture. in fact the tropical...
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Aug 30, 2013
08/13
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i've tried to help educate people on clots and the medical staff. when i first walked in, they thought i had a pneumonia. >> that's just really scary. you're back in the game, so to speak. do you think differently about things as you're participating in your sport? >> i think i have a new appreciation for it. i always loved what i did. when it's ripped out from underneath you and so quickly and so unexpectedly, it definitely -- it makes you appreciate how much you love the sport. and then to have the second chance, you know, almost the third chance again with mwr, and toyota to get back in a car and to be able to win a couple of weeks ago and to race for two more years for the sprint championship. >> so ultimate goal for you, ultimate, ultimate? >> to win the championship. i want to win the sprint cup championship. so bad. it's one of my goals that i haven't been able to accomplish yet. so i've been fortunate through the help of great teams and sponsors to win the races but the championship is where it's at. >> well, good luck to you. thank you so m
i've tried to help educate people on clots and the medical staff. when i first walked in, they thought i had a pneumonia. >> that's just really scary. you're back in the game, so to speak. do you think differently about things as you're participating in your sport? >> i think i have a new appreciation for it. i always loved what i did. when it's ripped out from underneath you and so quickly and so unexpectedly, it definitely -- it makes you appreciate how much you love the sport....
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and quite educational. a growing mix of lawmakers, both republicans and democrats, here in the united states say congress should have to authorize any use of military force. chief congressional correspondent dana bash is in washington, and also michael crowely from "time" magazine joins us because he wrote a very interesting article in "time" magazine talking about the president's war stance or how the president's stance on military action has changed since 2008. so welcome to you both. so dana, i want to start with you. we've been watching what's taking place in the british parliament. by the way, the british parliament was called back from break so that the british prime minister could have this debate with elected officials. why isn't that happening in the united states? >> for a lot of reasons. first of all, what you just saw is absolutely fascinating, but it is sort of a staple of the british political system is for the prime minister to stand there, frankly, and take it. and have this what's called qu
and quite educational. a growing mix of lawmakers, both republicans and democrats, here in the united states say congress should have to authorize any use of military force. chief congressional correspondent dana bash is in washington, and also michael crowely from "time" magazine joins us because he wrote a very interesting article in "time" magazine talking about the president's war stance or how the president's stance on military action has changed since 2008. so welcome...